So What?
It is understood that iPad apps will be much more capable than standard apps. We have seen this demonstrated with the iWork suite of apps. The iPad, however, was expected to be a tablet computer. It was expected to be comparable to a netbook, which is exactly how Jobs introduced it. People call it a giant iPod Touch because of fact that the OS is crippled in the same way the iPod Touch is,
especially when compared to a netbook OS.
No matter how capable an iPad app can be, it won't be as capable as an application for a full-fledged OS - the type you'd find on a tablet or netbook. The iPhone OS isn't as capable as a full-fledged OS - the type you'd find on a tablet or netbook.
Here's some examples of the limitations of the iPad compared to a tablet or netbook:
There are no windows (or multi-tasking). You can't have the browser open on one side of the screen and a little iPod or IM client (or both) open on the other side.
There is no access to internal storage or external media. You can't manage your documents or files. Even within an app you can only manage files for that particular app. You can't use
any USB device beyond a camera. No external hard drives, no thumb drives, no CD drives, no printers, no wireless connect cards, no USB headsets, no webcam, no keyboard, no mouse, no external speakers, etc.
You can't install software outside of the app store. All available apps are sandboxed (isolated from one another) so one app can't use files or data from another. You can't receive an mp3 from an IM chat and play it with the iPod. You can't download a PDF from the web and open it with a PDF viewing app. If you delete an app it deletes all the user data with it. Imagine if you uninstalled iTunes on your desktop and it also deleted all your music
There is no desktop where you can create shortcuts, view widgets, or manage apps. The layout of the dock and home screen are even identical to the iPod touch! Despite the extra space, there is still the same grid of icons and 4 apps across the dock. What is that, a practical joke?
This is basic, basic stuff for a netbook.
So while a larger screen will make iPad apps more capable - who cares? It's still far less capable than any
real tablet or netbook. And remember:
Any feature you use to argue that the iPad is better than a netbook is exactly what makes it a giant iPod Touch.
Letting alone the flaws in your logic, let me instead point out the myriad flaws in your statement:
1) "The iPad was expected to be a tablet computer." Oh yeah? By whom? You? And that makes it gospel? And...oh yeah, by the way, it
is a tablet computer.
2) "It was expected to be comparable to a netbook." And isn't it? I think it's been made quite clear that what it is designed to do more than covers the standard 80/20 (80% of the people use 20% of the features/functionality). Said another way -
most people spend 9x% of their time on email, web surfing, music, social networking, pix, etc. Pretty sure the iPad can handle all that with aplomb.
3) It's "crippled" like the iPod touch. Really? The same iPod touch that's sold in the tens of millions? Pretty sure most of those buyers have found some great things to do with their iPTs.
4) " it won't be as capable as an application for a full-fledged OS". Oh really? You do realize that "multi-tasking" will come don't you? There is nothing inherent in the hardware preventing this. Like cut and paste, this will come, mooting all of your already-weak arguments. Oh, and I put "multi-tasking" in quotes to distinguish b/t the functionality and the tech that underpins it.
5) "You can't have the browser open on one side of the screen and a little iPod or IM client (or both) open on the other side." See #4.
6) "There is no access to internal storage or external media. " There
is access to internal storage. There
is access to external media - ever hear of iDisk?
7) "You can't use
any USB device beyond a camera. No external hard drives, no thumb drives, no CD drives, no printers, no wireless connect cards, no USB headsets, no webcam, no keyboard, no mouse, no external speakers, etc." To say this without mentioning that you *can* use a BT keyboard, print wirelessly, that it
has built in wireless capability, that it
can use an iPhone headset, that it has no
need for a mouse, etc. is disingenuous at best.
8) "You can't install software outside of the app store." So? Gee so far the experience I've had is that there are a gazillion apps, the pricing is extremely low (almost preposterously so in many cases) and it's
far more convenient and enjoyable to purchase and install apps this way than any other I've ever experienced.
9) "All available apps are sandboxed (isolated from one another) so one app can't use files or data from another. " For now it would seem that way. However, we don't know for sure as clearly within iWork apps there is a way to (easily) pass info - if not also full files - back and forth.
10) "You can't download a PDF from the web and open it with a PDF viewing app" Wrong. Downloading files from the web is something explicitly outlined in the iPad. And we know PDF viewing is already there from the iPhone.
11) "There is no desktop where you can create shortcuts, view widgets, or manage apps. The layout of the dock and home screen are even identical to the iPod touch! Despite the extra space, there is still the same grid of icons and 4 apps across the dock." Actually the SDK revealed a 6x grid, including in the dock.
Overall though, it's not the specifics of your notions, it's the logic and short sightedness that underpins them. It truly baffles how anyone can fail to see that by focusing on feature X or feature Y more or less misses the point.
The focus should instead be on the experience in actual usage and the possibilities that exist from software development (both applications and the OS). You're citing the "lack" of these features as if there are no better solutions, when we know from experience that that's not the case in almost all these areas. And when multi-tasking is finally introduced in OS4 then the last of your objections will have been addressed not by workarounds but by 'direct' solutions.